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tv   Cashin In  FOX Business  August 25, 2013 2:30am-3:01am EDT

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and "cashin' in." ♪ ♪ boycotting over an emergency. >> what is your emergency? >> eric: a college player gunned down by thugs in the u.s. allegedly. now australian officials are calling for a boycott of the u.s. with violent crime on the rise, will the economy take the fall? plus, just when you thought the nsa scandal couldn't get worse, now this. reports out the agency can snoop on three-quarters of all internet traffic. those being watched not just terror suspects. innocent miles per hours like you and me. then, a rare moment. hollywood heartthrobs making waves in a good way.
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what ashton kutchner said that has sarah palin and rush limbaugh singing his praises. "cashin' in" starts now. hi, everyone. i'm eric bolling. welcome to "cashin' in." the crew this week, wayne rogers, jonathan hoenig, katie and juan williams. australian chris lane was in oklahoma to have fun playing baseball at college. they gunned him down for fun. given the number of violent crime on the rise in the u.s., wayne, this is a credible, real threat to the economy. >> oh, yes, eric. for example, the ten most dangerous cities, poverty on the rise, unemployment on the rise. crime on the rise. when you have crime on the rise, you to do something in account of that. police tactic and things that the police have to do to bring the order back to it, has to
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increase. not at the sacrifice of the personal rights but it has to increase in some ways. juan on the show today said the other day, the civil rights people of this country, al sharpton and these people have to go to neighborhood and lead the neighborhood. say positive. not be negative all the time. juan, you did a great job on that. i saw that, terrific idea. that is what has to take place. >> eric: juan, go ahead. respond to wayne. we note that detroit, 41% poverty rate. oakland 21%. st. louis, 27%. the ten most dangerous cities in the untry happen to have of the highest, most elevated poverty numbers in the country. >> yeah. poverty, unemployment. failure, drops out from school. guess what? a high percentage of minorities. i hurts my heart. wayne, this is what you need. you need leadership to come in
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and speak to kids who are not advancing, not making process and get involve with the gang activity. this is how they will prove they are somebody in this world. that is a losing prescription. you have to believe in education and a job and building a resume. i don't think that this is a mystery. if you want to make it in america. >> eric: jonathan, there is a -- >> yeah, even make minimum wage job to keep a young person out of trouble and focus on producing on the future. no question the gang pointed out. thereis less likely to be this violent crime in a stronger economy. young people are, of course, we have unemployment, a youth unemployment rate north of 18%. young people are less likely to see a future where they can achieve their goals and succeed. it's not just at home. look at spain, look at greece. terrible economies. youth unemployment 50%.
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>> eric: keep it at home. broken window theory. if you see the broken windows in the area, crime will get elevated. if you pick the broken windows the perception it's safer and cleaner and the businesses come back and jobs come back. >> we have seen this in new york city and washington, d.c. if you take an area and turn it in a place with busins and people employ and have jobs to get young people in workplace to keep them busy it's very important. going to the arguement that juan has made all week, the kids from the single parent homes are likely to live in poverty and commit crimes. this costs us money in lives and dollars. >> eric: juan, if you apply to this horrific killing that happened outside of oklahoma city, where three young people
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shot someone for fun, how does it apply? >> these are teenagers. one father in the courtroom said my son could haven't done it. wake up, dude. c'mon. we have kids online, spewing all kind of hateful messages. no structure around them. they are bore and think it's okay to tracksome somebody like an animal and kill them. sick. >> eric: important word that juan used. they were "bored." that's because they weren't working. >> true. >> you have to get them involved, too. i don't care, it could be community work. you could do anything. it requires some kind of leadership and some kind of responsibility. if the parents are absent, we all know it's a parental problem. we know the destruction of the family causes this. we know that. in the substitute of that, if the family is not around you
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have to have a adership in the community that will take that. you can't have people, as i said, like jesse jackson going out and saying things like he says. and not take some responsibility. he will not be responsible. that is the problem. >> eric, i think to that end, crime isn't so much of a real threat to the economy, it's a by product of the economy. we look at the horrific crimes, this in particular and say this is irrationm. it's disgusting. it is. it happens in the less strong economies where the people, young people don't see a future where they can succeed, produce, and achieve their goals. >> i'm not sure, i'm not sure. i agree with you on so many things, mostly constitutional things. i'm not sure crime is result of bad economy. rudy giuliani cleaned up times square and the crime went down. economy was better and crime went down. which -- is it the dog chasing the tail? >> it goes hand in hand. if you have a bad economy
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people aren't employed and therefore they are busy doing other thgs than working. if you have a good -- i think you have to bolster areas so people can come in and work. if you don't clean up the areas even in a good economy people won't want to be there. the bottom line in this case, we are talking about teenagers here, not talk about adults. this is teenagers under the age of 18. this starts at home. you can revach areas in new york city all that you want to. you can have the leaders from the civil rights era come in and talk to the young people. if you don't have parents at home, one of the young men charged with the murder in this case, his mother is in prison. >> for murder. >> da for duncan county said they are raising themselves. >> juan, the reverend al sharpton of the world, the jess key jackson take victory laps when it's going well in the economy. >> shouldn't they weigh in on this crime? >> they should. yes. to me they should say this is not the way to go.
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what i say, what you say, forget. they should understand that if they want credibility on larger issues with mainstream america, they have got to speak out about this. speak to kids in real terms here is how to be a success in the country. >> juan, look at the dis disdisincentive we put on these kids to get hired. get them working. we make it hard to give them -- >> eric: guess what? we could go on but we have more later in the show. stick around. when you think snooping couldn't get worse, we are hearing a three and four chance the nsa may be watching you on the internet. wait a minute. i thought they said this wasn't happening? t
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that andore coming your way. >> well, logging on to the ternet, be careful. a new report from the "wall street journal" says the nsa can snoop up to 75% of the e-mail traffic. in addition, the ns ab admits to intercepting 56,000 wholly domestic communications per year. that is 56,000 annual assaults on the constitution. what is the government doing with all the intel? check out the
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building in bluffdale, utah. taxpayers ponying up $1.5 billion to store our e-mail, phone calls and even our clicks online. the enormous facility will burn 65 megawatts of energy and require water to cool the computers. it has its own flores and it adds up to taxpayers dollars that is spent on snooping on taxpayers. the obama administration claiming to be transparent -- >> there is no spying on americans. we don't have a domestic spying program. >> has been anything but. >> go to jonathan first. a lot of money and taxpayer money spent on snooping on the taxpayer. >> yeah. the idea of spying against national security. this is a false choice. despite monitoring going o we miss benghazi, we missed the boston bombing. jihad around the world continues to grow. spying does not keep americans
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space. it's trying to win world war ii monitoring who will go to sushi restaurants or binging on german saucals. how we win a war is naming the enemy and taking military steps to defeat them. >> eric: jonathan, you got the german saucal comment in. i know you were working on that all morning. juan, president obama promised us that this wasn't going on. now, we find out it was going on to the tune of 56,000 occurrences per year. >> you know, it's an outrage. i am big on civil liberties. we have should be protected in the privacy. i must say that this is not so much directed at us. this is about keeping us safe. jonathan says you could do it without it. i'm not sure. i will tell you, if there was a terrorist incident boy, would we be up in arms. this is under the patriot act.
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>> you are saying you are forit or you're not. >> if i was fascinating, sorry, i'm for it. ultimately i don't want to get blown up. >> so as long as you say "terror" in the sentence it doesn't matter what you say after that. wayne, helps us out. >> there is to helping out. this is called the foreign intelligence surveillance act. foreign intelligence surveillance act. it doesn't say domestic snoop ing. we have domestic snooping going on all the time. this can happen because eric holder, whose voracity is comparable to pinocchio. he has a law that says special needs, you can take an exception to this and call it special needs and use it for
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everybody. >> the nsa turned out to be like the tsa. they look like they are doing good but they're actually not doing good. jonathan pointed out we haven't seen a lot of results from the program. what worked that obama got rid of is waterboarding, taking prisoners and asking them questions. that's where we got the intelligence from. we are no longer doing that. now we spy on americans instead. the patriot act was written in a way, john tesenbrenner said i wrote the patriot act, this is not what it's supposed to be used for. it's been corrupted. time to scratch it and start over. >> eric: john, before we go. do we pull funding for nsa or too important to keep in place? >> what is iportant, eric, is win the war. poll tis on both sides of the aisle resigned that we will always be in conflict against islam. by naming the enmy and taking steps to defeat them, we don't
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worry about them hurting bus the government violating. >> eric: you say defund it, wayne? >> i say defund it. i say do fig. but the first thing is you have to do it legally. to say that the supreme court who opponents, hail to the supreme court, appoints the other court, you have to stop this, this is a violation of the fourth amendment. this is a constitutional issue. they are paying no attention to it. >> eric: coming up, i plause from ashton. not from hollywood. but conservatives. why his speech is getting big thumbs up. >> i'm not familiar with ashton kutcher politics but all i know is what he saidis right on. all i know is what he said is exactly what young people in
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this
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>> eric: talk about a hollywood plot twist. conservatives like rush, sarah, and ted cruz praising ashton kutcher this week for something he told kids about work ethic at the teen choice awards. take a listen. >> i've never had a job in my life that i was better than. i was always just lucky to have a job. and every job i had was a
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steppingstone to my next job. i never quit my job until i had my next job. so opportunities look a lot like work. >> eric: katie, you agree, this is the exact message the kids should be hearing. >> absolutely. kids these days, right? i think that the attitude is that everyone wants the next fancy iphone and the next fancy thing. they don't understand that that takes work to obtain those things. i have seen a lotof young people turn the nose up athe entry level job. not pretending like you're entitled. >> hollywood gets a bad rap. you are from hollywood. you spend time in hollywood.
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>> he has been successful. easy to talk about jobs when you mick that much money. but he is right. >> he almost makes as much as you did per "mash" episode if my research is right. >> we produced the whole episode for that. >> good message, though, right? >> it's good. is it a good message. my experience young people want to work. they want to trade, they want to produce. they understand it's empowering for money and self-esteem. then they get to the public schools. they want to pursue the self-interest. happy to see any person standing up for capitalism and americanism to say yes, your life matters.
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>> these are good values. >> iove that he said if you want to be sexy, the sexiest thing is smart, thoughtful and generous. that is like eric bolling. >> eric: i was going to say that. all the "cashin' in" crew here. >> thank you for joining thus we. coming up, the cast of "duck dynasty." they are not quacks like most reality star. find out why americans are falling in love with them. it's
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>> eric: time for what do i need to know for next week? wayne, kick it off. >> in these times of, when the stock market is not necessarily what you would like it to be, i go back to some of the solid things that are like, in the drug area. because it takes a long time but it's solid. i like ibb, index for that. >> eric: jonathan, you like this? >> i can't say i'm in to drugs or pharmaceutical companies right now, eric. but i am bullish on cocoa. i'm talking about the commodity, itself. cocoa prices are at eight-month high. i don't like gold or oil or any commodities but cocoa is what i'm looking at. it's the hot weather if africa that is forcing the prices up. cold weather is coming here.
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buy it before the hot chocolate season. >> eric: buy it now so you don't pay a higher prices later. but don't want to be long hershey stock for that rson. leigh it there. >> don't own her i have stock but look at cocoa. >> eric: buy candy bars instead. leave it there. that is it for the "cost of freedom block. " but before we go, "duck dynasty" on pace to be the most watched show in cable he is torrey. if you haven't seen it, you are missing a lot of fun. a ton of fun. snarky one-liners, joking around. something you don't see much on tv. at the end of the show, the robinson family says a prayer, as a proud -- as being proud myself, i am glad to see that. i'll see you on "the five." have a great weekend. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ she has we celebrate our nation's birthday i want to share with you my favorite interviews so far this year, right here, right now. >> from fox business headquarters in new york city it is the tom sullivan show. here is your host, tom sullivan. >> thanks for joining us. the top of this that, government service started as a naval aviator than as a congressman, he ran the office of economic opportunity, he was ambassador to nato, white house chief of staff, served twice as defense secretary. if there is someone more experienced in hoing office in washington i'm not sure who that would be. here's my interview with the

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